JAPAN EARTHQUAKE SURVIVOR INTERVIEW: LA WEEKLY MAGAZINE. ANNOUNCING THE HOPE T-SHIRT PROJECT TO HELP RECOVERY!
Today, La Carmina and Sebastiano are featured in an LA Weekly interview and 33-photo slideshow. (Keep reading for the story, and the announcement of our new charity t-shirt!)
Liz Ohanesian writes about our wrenching experiences with the Japan earthquake and tsunami, and our continued efforts to fundraise for the victims. We couldn’t have made any of this happen without you — so we send our heartfelt thank yous.
Announcing… a collaboration t-shirt to benefit Japan! Sebastiano co-founded the Hope project with Like Atmosphere (a Japanese fashion brand he models for). He will be the main model for a line of t-shirts, with proceeds going to the victims of the Japanese tsunami and earthquake.
La Carmina and Seba are the inspiration for the t-shirt above, designed by Alice and the Cat. (You’ll recall that the artist previously drew images of me and Seba.) The charity shirts will be available for sale soon; please check my blog and sign up for the mailing list (top right sidebar) to be the first to know.
Please take a moment to read our LA Weekly interview below and here, and check out the slideshow. (Photo above and below by Doe Deere of Lime Crime.)
Actor and Model Sebastiano Serafini and Writer La Carmina on the 9.0 Earthquake in Japan
By Liz Ohanesian
Sebastiano Serafini, otherwise known as Seba, is a multi-media personality in Japan. He has modeled for a variety of labels, including Paul Smith and h. Naoto. Last year, he played Luca on the Japanese TV series Nijonjin no Shiranai Nihongo. Recently, he co-founded HOPE, a t-shirt fundraising project for Japanese earthquake and tsunami relief, with fashion company Like Atmosphere. Along with writer and fashion blogger La Carmina, he occasionally contributes to LA Weekly.
On the Sunday following the earthquake, Seba arrived in Los Angeles. I had picked him up from the airport and we chatted a little bit about what had happened when he was in Tokyo, but we didn’t discuss his experience in detail until the following week, after Seba was back in his native Italy and Carmina had returned to Vancouver.
Seba was at a meeting in Tokyo when the earthquake struck.
“Everything started shaking and everyone left the building and went out onto the street,” he recalled.
“Everybody was screaming and nobody knew what was happening at that time,” Seba continued. “Most of my friends who have lived in Tokyo for some time said that it’s very common that earthquakes happen, but so strong of one, it was the first time that happened.”
“It was very late at night, our time, Pacific Time,” said Carmina, who was in Vancouver on the day of the earthquake, preparing for a work trip to Japan the following week. “I came back from dinner and saw that a lot of my friends in Tokyo had put up statuses like, ‘Wow, what a giant earthquake!’ or ‘Apocalypse! Did you feel that?'”
Neither Seba nor Carmina felt any cause for alarm at first. The phone lines were down, but that’s a common side effect of an earthquake. It wasn’t until nighttime in Japan and morning on the North American West Coast, when they began to see images of the tsunami and realized that this wasn’t a normal earthquake.
(Photo above by Orlando Welsh for JapanLA.)
For Seba, the concern was raised that night, he said, “because the aftershocks kept going for the whole night.”
“It never stopped.”
Seba couldn’t sleep. So, he checked the television and Twitter, and that’s when he began hearing about the earthquake and tsunami victims in Sendai.
“It wasn’t just the earthquake, it was the tsunami,” he said. “Most of the people died from the tsunami, not the earthquake.”
Seba mentioned that one of his friends died in the tsunami.
“We couldn’t even wrap our heads around it,” said Carmina. “First the earthquake, then the tsunami… it was too much to handle.”
On top of that, there was the threat of nuclear meltdowns.
Seba had called the Italian embassy and was told that he should try to leave the country. He had also heard from his mother that people were leaving Japan to return to Italy. The second time he called the embassy, though, he was told he could stay. However, other foreigners in Japan were trying to get back to their home countries. It was confusing.
“What we were seeing is a lot of our friends who are foreigners were trying to leave and were already having problems,” said Carmina. “They couldn’t find flights to Europe, so that was another reason why I thought maybe it was best if we tried to get [Seba] out of here.”
Two days after the earthquake, Seba realized that he had to leave. However, trying to get a flight from Tokyo to Europe was no easy task.
“If you tried to go through a Japanese travel agent, it was impossible,” said Carmina. “So, what we did was call my travel agent, who is in Canada, and said ‘What can you get? Is it LA? Is It Hong Kong? Is it Italy?’
“At this point, we were thinking, let’s just get Seba out of here, who cares where, ideally a place where he knows some people, even Vancouver, but really, whatever flight he could get.”
Seba was able to get a direct flight from Tokyo’s Haneda Airport to Los Angeles International Airport.
“Los Angeles was a great option,” said Carmina, noting that Seba had first visited the city last December. “We had such a good experience and met a lot of supportive people, so we thought that if he comes to LA, we can harness all of these great supporters and do something for Japan here.”
Carmina flew down from Vancouver to meet Seba and they spent the following week working on ways to help Japan from abroad. They collected donations for Doctors Without Borders at clubs like Mr. Black and co-sponsored fundraiser events at Q Pop and JapanLA.
After one week, Carmina returned to Vancouver and Seba was able to fly to Italy.
“Right now, I’d rather stay with my family in Italy, at least for a few weeks, because they are very worried and I haven’t seen them in a long time,” said Seba. “At some point, I need to go back [to Tokyo].”
Seba is currently facing a situation that has perhaps affected other non-Japanese residents of cities affected by the earthquake. Should he go back and, if so, when?
“Many things have changed. Many live have changed,” he said. “But, for the people who stay in Tokyo, they’re trying to stay normal because they aren’t planning to leave. I can understand that. ”
He continued, “I need to go back because my life is there, but, I guess, even with my job…I don’t think it will ever be the same.”
What was your personal experience with the Japan earthquake and aftermath? How has your life changed because of it?
Japanese Word of the Day: Roshin = Nuclear reactor core
Song of the Day: Noisuf-X- Toccata del Terrore
33 Comments
Good job baby!
xoxo
I’m glad ur still having projects for Japan!. It’s going to be a process go back to normal but, after all…. The show must continue! ^ 3^!!
You bet!
Thank you for your gift of friendship La Carmina :))
GREAT interview!!! You are ahhhhhhmazing
help me with ideas for fundraising at college -dead-
;) Have a Wonderful day! :3
You two are doing some great work
thank you kindly
nice job….. Japan lives…again and again !
Thank you! I am glad we were able to come together to help Japan! I am still doing whatever I can to help! It was really nice meeting you! Hopefully we will meet again soon! :)
yeahh same!
LOVE the outfit!!
yay!
X)
Hello !
It’s my first post on your blog. I’m very pride of Seba and you. You do your best to help Japan, you make T-shirt and events to raise money… Very good job !
I’m afraid I can’t help Japan as well as you and Seba. But I do my best too.
Do you know JAPAN EXPO ? It’s a French convention about Japanese culture. To help Japan, JAPAN EXPO sales badges “GANBARE JAPAN”. All profits will go to the Japanese Red Cross. I bought badges for Japan n_n. And I pray too.
Fighting ^o^ !! (sorry, my english is very average >_< !)
Thank you! Yes, I’ve been invited to Japan Expo before. I hope I can go one day!
Hello !
It’s my first post on your blog. I’m very pride of Seba and you. You do your best to help Japan, you make T-shirt and events to raise money… Very good job !
I’m afraid I can’t help Japan as well as you and Seba. But I do my best too.
Do you know JAPAN EXPO ? It’s a French convention about Japanese culture. To help Japan, JAPAN EXPO sales badges “GANBARE JAPAN”. All profits will go to the Japanese Red Cross. I bought badges for Japan n_n. And I pray too.
Fighting ^o^ !! (sorry, my english is very average >_< !)
When will the HOPE shirts be available? I am in the states and would love to purchase one and support.
Thanks so much. We’ll announce it ASAP on my blog. There’s also a jewelry collaboration in the works! More info : https://lacarmina.com/2011/04/video-dancing-at-best-buy-dance-paradise-xbox-360-kinect-motion-sensor-detector-dancing-video-game/
Love the photos and the cause.
Thank you <3
I can’t wait to see it. I don’t usually buy event shirts, but may make an exception this time. =]
What you’re doing is amazing anyways, so surely there’ll be a lot of responses^^
It was so weird for me to hear about it. My mom woke me up with the news that something had happened in Japan. For Europe, everything had happened during the night. So we heard immediately everything that was happening. The quake, the tsunami and the nuclear threat. The day before I had a discussion in class about nuclear disasters like Chernobyl. And a day later, there was one for real in Japan.
It’s approaching or exceeding Chernobyl, I think… ugh, still hard to process.
He punched you, because you were dancing better than him. <3 Even if the game was a fail, you won ;)
the video made me laugh ^__^ @SebaOFFICIAL is laughing the whole time >__< Iove your outfit that is on that page as well <3
loving your outfits <3
★━━━キャo(●>∀<)o━━━☆
We have many more projects in the works to help Japan – thanks for your support!!
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